Thats the one I'm using, I'm on my third one, first two blew out. Its good enough if you have a flat smooth surface, get it on a dirt trail and its finished, even with two light AL80s.
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Ill draw something up. Im a fabricator by profession. I build offroad vehicle chassis etc... You can get pretty heavy duty wheels for relatively cheap. I use some on a torch cart I build that holdup to wheeling about 500 lbs around gravel parking lots over curbs etc... I think they were about 15 bucks each.
See, you guys are all looking at this the wrong way. Get the hand truck you want, then buy the vehicle to fit it in...
http://www.cavediver.net/forum/galle.../2/van_001.jpg
Mine is rated for 560lbs and collapses very nicely and has lasted 10 years.
Weighs 20 lbs and uses large tires
These are considered pro video equipment, and therefore not cheep (read as >$150).
You can find them at B and H photo: bhphoto.com
Expensive, but you will never need another.
H
I bought one this morning from Grainger. It's rated for 250lb and collapses very nice. It was listed for $145 but I got a company discount and didn't pay tax so i got it for $130. I'll be trying it out this week and I'll let you know well it performs.
I finally found it, the item number is actually 6YB11
It looks a lot like the one from Lowes.
http://www.globalindustrial.com/gcs/...web#gridAnchor
My buddies and I use this with almost #300 capacity, and another for near #500.
I've seen them both, they are sturdy and strong. My only beef is that since I first bought the #300 it was $40, now its near 2x the price so I guess word is out, and its selling well.
Dragged it through rough terrain, soak it in water, going strong now 2 years old.